Sept. 22 - 28, 2017
bringing the local news home to northwest Guilford County since 1996
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‘Done’ may soon describe area highway projects Finishing touches are being put on a segment of I-73, and the U.S. 220 widening project is due to be completed in November by JOE GAMM NW GUILFORD – Is it possible that one highway project in northwest Guilford County may be stamped “done” shortly – and another one will be completed within the next two months?
Photo by Joe Gamm/NWO
Patty Long Hill, daughter of William Henry “Doc” Long, watches as an honor guard raises the U.S. flag in her father’s honor during a ceremony held Sept. 19 at Carolina Field of Honor in Triad Park in Kernersville. The flag, which had flown over the U.S. Capitol, was presented to Hill by U.S. Rep. Mark Walker. Doc Long, who was born in Stokesdale, is remembered as a successful local businessman and a World War II veteran who loved sharing his story about how a pocket Bible he was carrying shielded him from a bullet and saved his life during the war. Doc Long was 93 when he died on June 11.
The Interstate 73 extension from Joseph M. Bryan Boulevard to U.S. 220 is within days of completion, according to N.C. Department of Transportation officials. Overnight, crews recently paved northbound and southbound lanes of N.C. 68 from the Old Bryan Boulevard exit to Pleasant Ridge Road. Flatiron/Blythe Development expected to have the final pavement down on the highway about Sept. 22, according to Patty Eason, NCDOT
Photo by Joe Gamm/NWO
U.S. 220 in Summerfield was crowded with crews, barrels, pipes, trucks and equipment on Saturday, Sept. 16, as Tetra Tech continues working to complete the 13.2-mile highway widening project.
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Town discusses cost of filling public records requests Some citizens argue that more documents being posted online would reduce the need for what the town sees as excessive requests by JOE GAMM SUMMERFIELD – Fulfilling public records requests costs Summerfield employees time and the town money, according to data provided to the town council during its meet-
ing on Sept. 12. Dee Hall, the town’s finance officer, said filling requests had cost the town $11,502 since the first of the year. Hall presented a report in response to the council’s recent request for an accounting of time and resources used in filling public records requests. The issue surfaced in June, when Town Manager Scott Whitaker told council members that filling continuous public requests from one particular citizen over the last
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IN THIS ISSUE News in Brief ........................ 2 Your Questions .................... 4 S’Field Town Council .......... 6 Youth / School news......... 11 Student Profiles ................. 12 Kindness Challenge ......... 14 High School Sports ........... 15 Business Notes .................. 18 Bits & Pieces ...................... 19 Crime/Incident Report ..... 20 Community Calendar ...... 22 Grins & Gripes ................... 25 Classifieds ......................... 27 Index of Advertisers ......... 31